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E-grāmata: Age Differences in Word and Language Processing

Edited by (Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH, USA), Edited by (University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, CO, USA)
  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Advances in Psychology
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Sep-1995
  • Izdevniecība: North-Holland
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780080526867
  • Formāts - PDF+DRM
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Advances in Psychology
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Sep-1995
  • Izdevniecība: North-Holland
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780080526867

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Concentrating on age differences in word and language processing because of its critical importance in daily life, demonstrates the utility of the process-specific approach to analyzing cognitive aging, which has been questioned of late by generalized complexity theorists. The 16 studies cover the traditional information-processing, neuropsychological, and psychophysiological approaches to understanding such tasks as word sensation and perception, word cognition, and language processing. They include critical reviews, empirical reports, and position papers. Of interest to researchers in gerontology, and various branches of psychology. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.

Component cognitive processes have played a critical role in the development of experimental aging research and theory in psychology as attested by articles published on this theme. However, in the last five to ten years, there has been a substantial increase in the number of articles attempting to isolate a single factor (or small subset of factors) responsible for age differences in information processing. This view of aging is frequently termed the complexity model of the generalized slowing model, the primary assumption being that age differences in cognition are due simply to a relatively larger performance decrement on the part of older adults (compared to younger adults) as task complexity increases. Because generalized complexity theorists have questioned the utility of using component cognitive processes as theoretical constructs, the editors feel it is time to restate why component cognitive processes are critical to any thorough understanding of age differences in cognition. Thus the present edited volume represents an attempt to demonstrate the utility of the process-specific approach to cognitive aging. Central to this effort are illustrations of how regression analyses may provide evidence for general slowing by maximizing explained variance while at the same time obscuring local sources of variance.

The book concentrates on age differences in word and language processing, because these factors relate to reading which is a critical cognitive process used in everyday life. Furthermore, age differences in word and language processing illustrate the importance of taking component cognitive processes into consideration. The breadth of coverage of the book attests to the wide range of cognitive processes involved in word and language processing.

PART I: Traditional Information Processing Approaches.
1. Why latent
models are needed to test hypotheses about the slowing of word and language
processes in older adults (D.L. Fisher et al.).
2. Visual word encoding and
the effect of adult age and word frequency (P.A. Allen et al.).
3. Age
differences in orthographic and frequency neighborhoods (L.M. Stadtlander).
4. Aging and language performance: From isolated words to multiple sentence
contexts (G. Kellas et al.).
5. Semantic processes in implicit memory: Aging
and meaning (D.B. Mitchell).
6. Evidence for task specificity in age-related
slowing: A review of speeded picture-word processing studies (P.C. Amrhein).
7. Aging and the distribution of resources in working memory (E.A.L. Stine).
PART II: Neuropsychological Approaches.
8. Neuropsychological implications of
word recognition deficits (M.B. Patterson, D.N. Ripich).
9. Stimulus encoding
in Alzheimer's disease: A multichannel view (G.C. Gilmore).
10. Aging,
Alzheimer's disease, and word recognition: A review of the recent literature
(F.R. Ferraro).
11. Semantic priming in Alzheimer's disease: Meta-analysis
and theoretical evaluation (B.A. Ober, G.K. Shenaut).
12. Indirect memory
tests in Alzheimer's disease (M. Hartman, M.L. Pirnot). PART III:
Psychophysiological Approaches.
13. Using event-related brain potentials to
draw inferences about human information processing (K.R. Ridderinkhof, T.R.
Bashore).
14. Do the waves begin to waver? ERP studies of language processing
in the elderly (J.W. King, M. Kutas).
15. Memory and aging: An event-related
brain potential perspective (D. Friedman, M. Fabriani).
16. Do general
slowing functions mask local slowing effects? A chronopsychophysiological
perspective (T.R. Bashore, F. Smulders). Author index. Subject index.